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Stanford Prevention Research Center Stanford University School of Medicine What is the Right College for You? Marilyn Winkleby, MPH, Ph.D. Professor of.

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Presentation on theme: "Stanford Prevention Research Center Stanford University School of Medicine What is the Right College for You? Marilyn Winkleby, MPH, Ph.D. Professor of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Stanford Prevention Research Center Stanford University School of Medicine What is the Right College for You? Marilyn Winkleby, MPH, Ph.D. Professor of Medicine, Stanford University Graham Career Day May 2013

2 Stanford Prevention Research Center Education: the Big Payoff

3 Stanford Prevention Research Center Topics We Will Cover Types of colleges Choosing the right college Finding out about the best choice Why students drop out Resources

4 What Happens after High School? High School Diploma/GED Graduate or Professional School Masters, Doctorate Community College Associate’s Degree (2 years) Technical School Certificate (6 months – 2 yrs) University Bachelor’s Degree (4 years) Middle School Diploma

5 Stanford Prevention Research Center College Pop Quiz Name four local colleges or universities What degree can you earn from a community college? What degrees can you earn from a 4-year college? Name the 2 kinds of a bachelor’s degree

6 Stanford Prevention Research Center Types of Colleges Vocational/technical Community colleges (junior colleges) California State University (CSU) University of California (UC) Private colleges/universities

7 Stanford Prevention Research Center Vocational/Technical Colleges (e.g., Heald, Everest, Phoenix, National University) Specialized training (medical assisting, paralegal, accounting) Program length varies Receive a certificate/diploma or AA Some award BA or BS Most privately owned—check costs, accreditation, graduation rates, job placements! Community colleges may offer similar programs at much less cost

8 California’s System of Higher Education System#DegreesAdmissions California Community Colleges 1092-year Associate of Arts (AA or AS) degrees, certificate programs Open admission California State University (CSU) 234-year Bachelor of Arts (BA) and Bachelor of Science (BS), some graduate degrees including Master’s degrees (MA) and PhD Admits top 33% of California high school graduating class University of California (UC) 104-year BA and BS degrees, graduate degrees including PhD and professional degrees such as medicine (MD), law (JD), and veterinary science (DVM) Admits top 12.5% of California’s high school graduating class

9 Stanford Prevention Research Center Community Colleges (AA, AS, certificates) (e.g., DeAnza, Foothill, Canada, Mission, San Jose City) 2-year programs Can complete first 2 years of coursework (lower- division courses), then transfer to a 4-year college to complete last 2 years (upper-division courses) Open enrollment Tuition is less expensive Smaller classes No BA or BS awarded Gateway to 4-year colleges

10 Stanford Prevention Research Center 4-year California State Universities (e.g., Cal State San Jose, San Francisco, Monterey Bay, Sacramento, Long Beach, Fullerton) 4-year programs – BA, BS Many different subjects/majors to study Some masters and doctoral degrees May live on campus but many commuters The largest, most diverse, and one of the most affordable university systems in the country.

11 Stanford Prevention Research Center 4-year University of California (e.g., U.C. Davis, Berkeley, Santa Cruz, UCLA, Santa Barbara, San Diego, Riverside) 4-year programs – BA, BS Many different subjects/majors to study Research based, MA & PhD degrees Many live on campus or off campus in rentals Among US public colleges, Berkeley and UCLA ranked in top 5, six in top 10 UC Berkeley ranked fourth worldwide among public and private universities, UCLA and UC San Diego ranked among top 15

12 Stanford Prevention Research Center Private Colleges (e.g., Stanford, U. of Santa Clara, USC, San Francisco U, Loma Linda, Mills, faith-affiliated) 4-year programs – BA, BS and graduate degrees. Receive no direct subsidy from state school located in. Can be exclusive, difficult to get into. Often smaller enrollment and smaller classes. Offer smaller range of majors, but often have particular academic focus (e.g., liberal or fine arts). Often higher number of extra-curricular activities. Tuition may be 9-10 x higher than at public institutions. May have good financial aid for high achieving students, low income students, and student athletes. Academic standards vary greatly—from prestigious to “cautionary.”

13 Stanford Prevention Research Center Imagine Yourself at College It’s never too early to: Talk with family, friends, college students, teachers, alumni & counselors about their college experiences Research colleges that interest you Participate in college access programs Attend college fairs Visit local colleges

14 Stanford Prevention Research Center What is the Right College for You? Small, medium or large? Urban/rural? Ethnic diversity? Distance from home? Entrance requirements (GPA, SATs)? Classes/majors? Cost? Financial aid? Campus activities/support? Graduation rates? Job internships/placements?

15 Stanford Prevention Research Center Learn More about Colleges from Others Ask about other’s college experiences: How did you decide on which college to attend? What was your major and why did you choose it? What activities did you participate in? What was a typical college day like for you? What was the most challenging about your freshman year? How can I best prepare for college?

16 Stanford Prevention Research Center How Many Colleges to Apply to? Dream, good match, shoo-in Good match Shoo-in Dream My Colleges Dream

17 Stanford Prevention Research Center What Colleges May Ask You to Submit: Your Self Portrait Your Profile –GPA –Rank –Test Scores –AP, IB, Honors –Core Classes Your Strengths & Interests –Academic –Extracurricular –Personal Attitude –Passions College Application –Basic Information Form –High School Transcript –SAT or ACT Test Scores –SAT Subject Test Scores –Letters of Recommendation –Essay –Interview (if applicable) –Audition/Portfolio (if applicable)

18 Stanford Prevention Research Center Reasons Students Drop Out Unprepared for higher level academics Educational burnout (demanding classes, amount of homework) School poor fit for interests, skills, or desired major Too much fun, too many extracurricular activities Financial problems/not enough financial assistance Demands of job, desire for extra money Homesick, feeling like don’t fit in Lack of family or college support and resources Personal or family issues (personal stress, relationship ends, family illness)

19 Stanford Prevention Research Center Here’s a Simple Equation A college or career school education equals: –More money –More job opportunities –More freedom A college education is a long-term investment. Plan carefully and you can find the school and funding options that work best for you and put you on the path to success.

20 Stanford Prevention Research Center Resources This website is part of the College Board website-- search for colleges based on your preferences (size, location, majors, sports, etc.), look at career options, learn how to finance college, and more. https://bigfuture.collegeboard.org/ This website includes information on what types of aid there are, who qualifies, and how to get aid. http://studentaid.ed.gov

21 Stanford Prevention Research Center Good luck! "When educating the minds of our youth, we must not forget to educate their hearts.” Dalai Lama

22 Stanford Prevention Research Center Notes

23 Stanford Prevention Research Center Notes

24 Stanford Prevention Research Center Notes


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